- Chilean corvette Independencia (1818)
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Career (United States of America) Name: Curatio Owner: Paul Delano Launched: July 1818 In service: 9. September 1818 Fate: built for Chile Career (Chile) Name: Independencia Cost: USD300.000 Commissioned: September 1819 Out of service: 1. April 1826 Honours and
awards:Liberating Expedition to Perú, Expedition to California (capture of Spanish San Francisco Javier, definitive capture of Chiloé) Fate: sold to Argentina for $40.000 Career (Argentina) Name: Montevideo Cost: $ 40.000 Commissioned: 1. April1826 Fate: sunk in Talcahuano, refloated and sold to Perú Career (Peru) Name: Independencia Cost: $ 40.000 Fate: sunk in Callao General characteristics Class and type: Corvette Displacement: 850 t Length: 130-138 ft Beam: 37,3 ft Draft: 18 ft Propulsion: sail Crew: 200-256 Armament: 26 guns Independencia was a corvette of 851 tons and 26-gun built 1818 in the Forman Cheeseman Shipyard of New York under the name Curatio for the Chilean revolutionary government.
The ship was launched in July and tugged from Corlear's Hook in East River to the Hudson River to continue the work there. Because of US neutrality laws she was declared in the ship's register with the built number 203 on 30 July as merchant ship property of his captain, Paul Delano and, unarmed, set sails for Buenos Aires on 9 September, together with the Horatio (under Captain Joseph Skinner), built in the Adam and Noah Brown Shipyards under the same circumstances, and the Sachem with the respective materiel.
Contents
Chilean career
In Buenos Aires the Curatio set sails for Valparaíso, where she arrived on 23 June 1819 to be renamed Independencia and commissioned to the First Chilean Navy Squadron under the command of Captain Carlos F. Foster (also Robert Forster) and up 1821 Wilkinson.
She was flagship of Thomas Cochrane, 10th Earl of Dundonald's expedition to California in 1821. On the way she, together with the Araucano, captured the Spanish brigantine corsario San Francisco Javier. She ran aground near El Realejo without heavy losses.
In summer 1822/23 she was refitted in Valparaíso and participated in the blockade of Chiloé. 1823 transported Jorge Beauchef and his regiment from Valdivia to Talcahuano in order to support the Putsch of Ramón Freire against Bernardo O'Higgins.
1826 she participated to the blockade and conquest of Chiloé under the command of Paul Delano again.
Argentine career
On 1 April 1826 she was sold for $40,000 to Argentina (in war against Brazil) and renamed Montevideo, but her bad condition impeded the rounding of Cape Horn, and she sank in Talcahuano. She was refloated and sold to Peru.
Peruvian career
She was sunk in Callao
See also
- First Chilean Navy Squadron
External links
- Gerardo Etcheverry, Principales naves de guerra a vela hispanoamericanas. (retrieved 22. January 2011) in Spanish languagee
Categories:- First Chilean Navy Squadron
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